Wright v. Sue & Charles, Inc.

749 A.2d 241, 131 Md. App. 466, 2000 Md. App. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 2000
Docket1379, Sept. Term, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 749 A.2d 241 (Wright v. Sue & Charles, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Sue & Charles, Inc., 749 A.2d 241, 131 Md. App. 466, 2000 Md. App. LEXIS 65 (Md. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

MOYLAN, Judge.

With commendable candor, the appellants acknowledge that their primary argument on this appeal is 1) that the substantive law with respect to tort liability for (a) dispensing and (b) *468 supervising the consumption of alcoholic beverages desperately needs changing and 2) that we, in the course of reversing the judgment against them, should make that substantive change. It is a bold and sweeping invitation. Out of deference, however, to James Madison 1 and other architects of the American governmental scheme, we must decline.

American courts do, indeed, sometimes make law. If it were not so, appellate reports would not be published. Courts, however, make law only on the periphery. They make law when they interpret statutes and constitutional provisions, but they do not enact statutes or frame constitutional provisions. They make law with respect to the procedures and the rules of evidence that facilitate the functioning of the courts. They do not, however, create or change substantive law affecting conduct outside the courtroom. As Justice Holmes explained, “judges ... legislate ... only interstitially.” 2

Time was, of course, when common law courts actually made or changed substantive law, but that practice is no longer a valid precedent. The time was pre-1776 and the place was England (or other places that were still the colonies of England). The rationale for such authority in the common law courts was that the primary source of law was not the people, speaking through a legislative branch, but the King. The courts were simply an arm of the King, as the very extension of the word “court” to those more peripheral venues of the royal presence graphically demonstrates. That law-making prerogative was forever curtailed when American constitution makers, state and federal, designed a radically different governmental scheme incorporating Montesquieu’s concept of three coordinate branches of government and the careful allocation of separate powers among those separate branches. If the judicial branch today occasionally strays beyond its *469 assigned turf, it is either an inadvertent lapse or a stealthy usurpation of a power that properly belongs somewhere else.

On April 22, 1997, seventeen-year-old Anthony Joseph Wright (“the decedent”), along with eighteen-year-old Jason Burch, purchased alcohol from appellee Sue & Charles, Inc. (d/b/a “New Hampshire Liquors”). The two boys then proceeded to the home of another acquaintance, Bobby Foard, where the deceased and Burch consumed the alcohol they had earlier purchased. At some time later, the deceased left the Foard home alone in his motor vehicle. The deceased was then involved in a single-car automobile accident in which he was killed.

On April 22,1998, the appellants, Joseph Wright and Theresa Wright, brought a wrongful death action on behalf of their deceased son in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County. Named as defendants in the Complaint were (1) Sue & Charles, Inc.; (2) Lee Choi and Han Yong Choi, the owners/operators of Sue & Charles, Inc.; and (3) Robert Clebe Foard and Lois Jean Foard, the parents of Bobby Foard. The appellants sought $15 million in damages.

Sue & Charles, Inc. and the Chois filed a Motion to Dismiss the Complaint on the ground that it failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted. On July 27,1998, Judge Arthur M. Ahalt granted the motion. Thereafter, the Foards also filed a Motion to Dismiss. Six months later, the appellants filed a Motion for Appropriate Relief complaining that a hearing had not been held before the initial granting of the Motion to Dismiss. On July 6, 1999, a hearing was conducted. At the conclusion of that hearing, Judge Ahalt granted the Motion to Dismiss in favor of all defendants. This timely appeal was noted. The appellants allege that the trial court improperly granted the appellees’ motions to dismiss. The appellants specifically contend that:

1. The trial court erred in ruling that there is an absolute prohibition on civil liability based on the sale of alcoholic beverages to a minor; and
*470 2. The trial court erred in failing to hold the Foards accountable for the decedent’s death based on a theory of “social host liability.”

Dram Shop 3 Liability

The trial court, in granting the appellees’ motions, explained:

As counsel for the Plaintiff recognizes, the law in Maryland has been fairly well established for a considerable period of time concerning liability in situations like this. The Court of Appeals has not spoken with respect directly to some of the issues raised, but it’s not the function of this Court to create causes of action.
... It’s not my responsibility to create new policy or new causes of action, so for all of those reasons, the current state of the law in Maryland requires me to grant the Motion to Dismiss for [all] of the Defendants.

The first case to address the issue presented in this case was State v. Hatfield, 197 Md. 249, 78 A.2d 754 (1951). In that case, Frank Love, a minor, bought alcohol at a tavern and consumed the alcohol while on the premises. Shortly thereafter Love operated a motor vehicle and caused a collision in which James Joyce, an innocent party in another vehicle, died. Joyce’s widow subsequently brought suit against the tavern and its operators claiming that the defendants were negligent in (1) selling alcohol to a minor and (2) continuing to sell Love alcohol when he was visibly intoxicated and the tavern operators had reason to know Love would have to operate a motor vehicle in order to leave the premises. The trial court would not permit the suit to go forward, holding that the proximate cause of the collision was not the unlawful sale of liquor but the negligence of the individual who drank the liquor.

*471 In considering whether the tavern could be held liable for Joyce’s death, the Court of Appeals focused on the common law:

Apart from statute, the common law knows no right of action against a seller of intoxicating liquors, as such, for “causing” the intoxication of the person whose negligence or wilful wrong has caused injury. Human beings, drunk or sober, are responsible for their own torts. The law (apart from statute) recognizes no relation of proximate cause between the sale of liquor and a tort committed by a buyer who has drunk the liquor.
* * *
The common-law rule holds the man who drank the liquor liable, and considers the act of selling it as too remote to be a proximate cause of an injury caused by the negligent act of the purchaser of the drink.

197 Md. at 254-55, 78 A.2d 754 (emphasis supplied). In Hatfield,

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Bluebook (online)
749 A.2d 241, 131 Md. App. 466, 2000 Md. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-sue-charles-inc-mdctspecapp-2000.